Carol Vorderman has taken yet another swipe at Michelle Mone and her businessman husband as the bitter feud between the former friends rumbles on.
Vorderman has repeatedly attacked the Tory peer over claims she and her billionaire husband Doug Barrowman made £200million after ‘aggressively lobbying’ for a government PPE contract during the pandemic.
In her latest salvo, the former Countdown star shared a newspaper story about Monthly Advance Loans (MAL), a company linked to Mr Barrowman that is charging borrowers up to 92% APR on small loans, according to the Sunday Post.
Tweeting the article last night, Vorderman wrote: ‘MICHELLE MONE’S HUSBAND A new company based around his now infamous firm on the Isle of Man is giving loans of £1,000-£5,000 with APR of up to 92%.
‘Both currently under police investigation, is there no moral bar too low for these two??’
Michelle Mone with her businessman husband Doug Barrowman at the State Opening of Parliament
In her latest salvo, the former Countdown star shared a newspaper story about Monthly Advance Loans (MAL), a company linked to Mr Barrowman
Vorderman took to Twitter last night to share an article from the Sunday Post
Documents seen by the Post reportedly show Mr Barrowman is an investor in the firm’s parent company Mal (Holdings) Ltd. It is registered at the Isle of Man headquarters of his Knox Group business empire.
The office is also the address of Mr Barrowman and Baroness Mone’s charity, the Barrowman Foundation, which was set up for the ‘relief of poverty’.
The Post reported that MAL’s 92% interest rate, which includes fees, is 15 times more than those offered by banks.
A spokesman for Baroness Mone said: ‘Baroness Mone has no involvement or financial interest in Harrogate Limited, MAL Holding Ltd or Monthly Advance Loans Ltd.’
A spokesman for Mr Barrowman said: ‘Mr Barrowman is not a director or shareholder of Monthly Advance Loans Ltd.’
Vorderman, 62, used to be friends with the embattled bra baroness, with the pair regularly having ‘great fun’ on nights out together.
Addressing their rift for the first time on national television last month, the TV star insisted she dropped her former friend ‘like a stone’ after ‘realising what kind of person she was’.
‘I cannot talk about useless PPE without also talking about Michelle Mone who was brought into the House of Lords, as a baroness, by David Cameron,’ the former Countdown host told This Morning.
‘We know she has taken leave of absence without losing the Tory whip to start with because she was actively involved, as it goes, with a company called PPE Medpro.’
She then mentioned her former friendship with Baroness Mone, before adding: ‘Now Michelle Mone, I knew, many years ago and then dropped her like a stone as soon as I realised what kind of person she was.’
Vorderman, 62, used to be friends with the embattled bra baroness, with the pair regularly having ‘great fun’ together (pictured in 2012)
Vorderman then turned to the camera, held both hands up and said: ‘Sue me, Michelle.’
At this point, This Morning host Alison Hammond interrupted Vorderman to say: ‘Carol, can I just say she’s not here to defend herself.’
But she continued: ‘No she’s not here to defend herself but I’m repeating what has been said in the press and what has proven to be true.’
Vorderman has strongly criticised Baroness Mone over allegations relating to government contracts to supply PPE, firing off more than a dozen tweets on the subject.
The broadcaster has even claimed her former friend – who she has not been pictured with since 2012 – should be ‘slammed in jail where she belongs’.
An insider recently claimed it was Vorderman who ended the friendship, telling The Sun: ‘There was no bitter bust up or rows between them.
‘Carol just decided not to continue the friendship over ten years ago.’
Baroness Mone is under investigation by the National Crime Agency as part of a fraud investigation into a Covid supplies company she recommended to ministers.
She is also being probed by the House of Lords over concerns that she may have failed to declare an interest in PPE Medpro and lobbying for it to win £203million in NHS contracts, and has lost the Tory whip after taking a break from Parliament in an attempt to clear her name.
The Government is also suing the firm for allegedly breaching the terms of one deal to supply 25million surgical gowns for medics.
2010: Vorderman (left) and Baroness Mone at the launch party of The Sun’s new magazine, The Buzz
Baroness Mone suffered another setback after the taxman said part of her husband Doug Barrowman’s business empire was promoting tax avoidance schemes
Prior to the breakdown of the pair’s friendship, they had been spotted together on several nights out.
In 2012, Baroness Mone spoke about how Vorderman was helping her get over her divorce from her ex, Michael.
‘Every day, I’m getting stronger and I’ve learned a lot,’ she told Zest magazine.
‘I used to do everything with my husband, so I’ve had to start all over again, creating a whole new social life at 40.
‘I spend a lot of time with my girlfriends – I have great fun with Carol Vorderman – and I have discovered a passion for karaoke.’
Baroness Mone also welcomed Vorderman to Twitter, tweeting: ‘Please follow my good friend Carol Vorderman.
‘The sexy woman is new to Twitter so say hi! Mx.’
It comes as Vorderman revealed new details about her relationship history including her 10-year-long ‘no-strings-attached’ relationships with multiple men, who she calls her ‘special friends’.
2010: Vorderman and Baroness Mone Marion Rose Ball in aid of Children with Leukaemia at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London
The presenter went on to slam ‘b*****ks’ rules against women, claiming she gets ‘frustrated’ when they’re told to ‘find a man’.
She told The Sun: ‘I don’t understand why my behaviour should change just because I’m getting older.
‘I might have a boyfriend who only lasts a few months. I call them ‘special friends’. People may have other terms for them!’
She added elsewhere in the interview: ‘Every romcom tells women to look for love and live happily ever after. It’s all nonsense. We sell every little girl the message: ‘Cinderella needs a prince to save her.’ Yet half of marriages end in divorce.’
Vorderman has been married twice and has two children, and although currently single, fans are always clamouring to hear about her previous relationships.
Baroness Mone recently suffered another setback after the taxman said part of her husband’s business empire was promoting tax avoidance schemes.
The taxman named and shamed three ‘tax avoidance’ schemes promoted by a firm in her husband Doug Barrowman’s Knox Group.
HM Revenue and Customs issued a press release earlier this month saying the programmes promoted by AML Tax (UK) Ltd all ‘seek to disguise remuneration’ – wrongly allowing company directors to avoid paying tax on their income.
It emerged last month that Vorderman had called a halt to their friendship ‘some time ago’, but today was the first time she had addressed the issue on national television
Mary Aiston, HMRC’s director of counter-avoidance, said: ‘These schemes are cynically marketed as clever ways to pay less tax.
‘The truth is they rarely work in the way the promoters claim and it is the users that end up with big tax bills. HMRC will continue to use all the powers at our disposal to crack down on promoters.
‘Anyone who thinks they may be involved in a tax avoidance scheme, or have been approached by a scheme promoter, should contact us as soon as possible to get help.’
Last March, AML Tax was fined £150,000 after a tribunal found it had failed to comply with a tax investigation by HMRC.
At the time, the taxman said the company was ‘part of Doug Barrowman’s Isle of Man based Knox Group’.
In the new announcements, the taxman identified Annuity Arrangements, AML Prefunded EBT and AML Split Contracts as tax avoidance schemes promoted by AML Tax.
HMRC said the schemes ‘make use of complex company structures and directors’ loan accounts’ to allow people to be paid without having to pay income tax, National Insurance or corporation tax.
MailOnline has contacted Baroness Mone for comment.